CheapShow - Ep 264: Buzby Time
Episode Date: January 14, 2022Paul & Eli are back in the House of Mash & Egg for another, simple, regular, no frills, super normal episode of CheapShow. This week, the cheap chaps dive into Eli's record collection to uncover a new... charity shop purchase. If you are too young to remember, you'll have no idea what "Buzby" is. To be fair, Paul and Eli don't really remember it either, but it brings them back around to talking about Bernard Cribbins, which is nice! He seems nice. If you have ever wondered what a 1970s promotional pop single for the national phone service sounds like, you'll find out in this week's podcast. In fact, if it wasn't for Eli's instance that Paul tries some hot sauce and chili candy, this would be quite the musical episode! Are you ready for "Fizzy Gravy (The Cod Song)"? You won't be! See pictures and/or videos for this episode here: https://www.thecheapshow.co.uk/ep-264-buzby-time And if you like us, why not support us: www.patreon.com/cheapshow If you want to get involved, email us at thecheapshow@gmail.com And if you want to, follow us on Twitter @thecheapshowpod or @paulgannonshow & @elisnoid Like, Review, Share, Comment... LOVE US! Oh, and you can NOW listen to Urinevision 2021 on Bandcamp... For Free! Enjoy! https://cheapshowpodcast.bandcamp.com/album/urinevision-2021-the-album MERCH Official CheapShow Merch Shop: www.redbubble.com/people/cheapshow/shop Www.cheapmag.shop Thanks also to @vorratony for the wonderful, exclusive art: www.tinyurl.com/rbcheapshow Send Us Stuff CheapShow PO BOX 1309 Harrow HA1 9QJ
Transcript
Discussion (0)
That's something we haven't explored.
What haven't we explored?
Cod.
That's a word.
How do you want to explore it?
Tell me how you want to explore it.
Have you started recording now?
Is that what's happening?
No, no, no.
No, I wouldn't do that to you, mate.
Something along the lines of,
I've just chucked my cod off into the river.
So anyone's wondering if things are going to change in 2022.
Into the river, spod off!
Paul, I've chucked a cod. Into the river, spod off! Paul, I've chucked a cod off.
Into the river, spod off.
Go and fetch your rod off.
Fishing.
Catch my cod in the river, spod off.
Catch my cod in the river, spod.
Spod me off.
Spod me off.
Catch my...
We haven't had enough of that lately.
I've been sitting in my gravy all night
since I shat in the bath.
Baby, baby.
I've been sitting in my gravy
since I shat in the bath.
Oh, baby, baby.
I can imagine that as a nice,
kind of nice soul disco hit.
I can imagine it.
Look, we should return to that,
but I think what's on the top of the agenda right now, Paul,
is to introduce the listeners to Cheap Show.
My bath was full of bubbles until I got the grubbles.
Who came out?
Right, hello, welcome to Cheap Show.
I'm just sitting in my gravy as I shat myself in the bath.
I've been sitting in my gravy since I shat in the bath, oh baby.
Who's that gravy?
It's my own gravy.
Who's that gravy?
Fizzy, fizzy gravy.
Right, right.
So, welcome to Cheap Show, the economy comedy podcast where Eli and I go for the bargain
into the charity shops of Great Britain and bring you the treasures we find amongst the
trash.
Welcome in.
Why don't you?
Amongst?
Amongst the trash? Amongst the trash. Among the we find amongst the trash. Welcome in. Why don't you? Amongst? Amongst the trash?
Amongst the trash.
Among the trash.
Among the trash.
I think you would be among the trash if you were like in a,
like with some low people, and they were trash, you know?
Among the trash.
But if you're amongst the trash, I have nothing.
You have fucking nothing.
Welcome to the podcast, everyone.
Oh, God.
Can we start again?
No.
I hate you and your fucking noodle posse.
People love noodles.
It's just a fact of Cheap Show you're going to have to learn to fucking accept.
Cheap Show.
I'm gonna have to learn to fucking accept Cheap Show
Off-brand brand off-brand brand off
Cheap Show
It's the price of shade
Paul Gannon.
Eli Silverman.
Welcome to Cheat Show.
And I go and I nuzzle.
Hello, welcome to the podcast.
I'm Dashing Paul Gannon and with me is...
It's Eli Silverman, Paul.
Furious Eli Silverman Paul And Eli's not
Furious Eli Silverman
I'm not quite prepared
For the cut and thrust
Of how we're going at this
This is a truncated
Condensed
Super fast episode
No it's not
It's a super fast
Can we be very robust
Can I robustly cut and thrust
As I move through
Hey shut up
Just for a second
How about
I explain what's going on?
There's nothing fucking going on.
You've cut the segments in half.
I haven't.
And I have to...
The thing that used to be a proper segment of the show,
the source report,
a fucking building pillar,
a standing stone,
a foundational rock,
on which this tattered podcast...
Oh, you shut up.
You boring fucking cunt. On which this... Fucking hell. On which this tattered podcast... Oh, you shut up! You boring fucking cunt!
On which this...
Fucking hell!
On which this tattered podcast once draped...
Here's the plan.
Let me explain to the audience.
The source report.
The plan.
The source report.
That is...
Who's the boss?
It is the sauce.
That is not important right now.
Let me talk.
It's your loss.
Shut up!
I'll fucking clout you.
It's your loss if you forget the sauce, man.
That's all I'm saying.
That's all I'm actually saying.
Here's the plan for the first few weeks,
stroke months of Cheap Show this year.
Stroke months?
Is that a wacky month?
Mate!
I need to get this information out,
so just give me the time to do it,
and then you can do all the chodney-rodney,
bar-off-car-off,
arty-jarky-modernist.
No, I'm not going to say that.
I'm not going to say anything like that.
Please be normal. Just for a bit to say anything like that please be normal
just for a bit
what do you mean
be normal
we were having a
lovely chat
before this kicked out
and then as you're
in the toilet
warming up mentally
I can hear the
Chodney's coming
you're sitting there
pissing going
Chodney
I was not
I was not
and I knew the minute
you walked into this room
I'd say something like
the Eli I know
walks out
and the twat
I do a podcast with
walks in
okay I'm sorry
alright tell him
you're busy and everything.
Fucking hell.
So, shut up.
Even now
you're still talking.
Shut up.
I can't wait
to do a live show, Paul
and we'll see
which side of the bread
it's buttered.
I don't know.
You on your live shows
is just,
you turn up
with a flash ground
and you don't do much.
Except get all the laughs.
So, going forward for the next few weeks of cheap show i need to write my write my fucking book which i i haven't touched in ages and i need to concentrate and find days on it but because
cheap show takes about two or so days to edit i want to give myself an extra day so i can make
the editing simpler it just means taking out a segment of the show so rather than like 90 minute
episodes we can do an hour for the next few weeks. You know what I'm saying?
That's all I'm saying.
You said 45 minutes.
Your goal is 45 minutes.
45 to 60 minutes.
That's the corporate front I'm saying.
It's just the corporate front of Paul.
It won't be any fewer than 45 minutes
and it won't be any more than an hour.
That sounds like bullshit.
Already I'm thinking this is going to be
a 90 minute episode.
No, it's not.
It's not, Paul.
Let's move on.
It's the source report time.
So I just thought the structure is usually cold open, intro, two segments, outro.
And what I wanted to do was do cold open, intro and segment, and then a segment, and then outro.
So we're losing a segment in all.
You're really peeling back the sweaty beef curtain of the show.
The slime.
Diarrhea.
He's got a film of slime over it, the beef curtain of the show that you're putting back.
Because of his syntactic vomit that's been coming out of his fucking gobble,
I've decided to drop your sauce segment now for the opening of this thing.
No, no!
Well, I'm sorry.
Don't punish, you can't punish.
I am punishing you because I'm your boss.
You're punishing everyone.
I'm your boss.
You're punishing everyone with dropping the sauce.
Come on.
Mate, let's look at the past year.
Your sauce reports, no one's liking them as much. The noodle special went down like the sauce. Come on. Mate, let's look at the past year. Your source reports, no one's liking them as much.
The noodle special went down
like the Titanic.
Thousands screaming.
Multiple dead.
Let's just taste this sauce.
Blockbuster movies made about it
a hundred years later.
They like the hat though.
There's been a lot of engagement
with that hat.
Yeah, great.
The biggest thing you brought
to Cheap Show recently
is your fucking hat
that makes you look like
a touch of frost.
Did we have any other sort of
unfinished facts
that we needed to
cram in from last week?
Yeah, Doctor Who was in.
Oh yeah.
Doctor Who was in it, yeah.
So yeah, there's another scene
we were going to talk about
but we just didn't find the time
stroke forgot
which was in the film
a Colin Baker,
the sixth Doctor
plays the guy
who has the knickers.
This is Dangerous Davis,
the last detective
which we covered
in last week's episode.
Quite forensic detail. For new listeners. Yes. Hello new listeners. Oh no, the listeners have all which we covered in last week's episode. Quite forensic detail.
For new listeners.
Yes.
Hello, new listeners.
Oh, no, the listeners have all gone by now.
Anyone who decides to give this episode a try this year
has listened to the first fucking, like,
five minutes of your gob nastiness.
As I open this source for the source report.
No, that's not happening.
I'll be eating the source.
I mean, going forward.
You do what you want.
Going forward, I'll be eating the source.
So what?
Going forward, you'll just be
surreptitiously having sauce?
And reporting on it.
I mean, that's what the source report is. And we agreed on the source report. No, you'll just be surreptitiously having sauce and reporting on it and then that's what
the sauce report is
and we agreed
on the sauce report
no you know what mate
you fucking do it
because that means
I can edit out
10 minutes of this podcast
and make it shorter
so you talk for as long
as you want
and I'll let it record
and then when it comes down to it
snippity pip
snippity pop
out goes the segment
oppity plop
I need your support
on the sauce segment Paul
do you
why
because I need you
to taste the sauce with me.
Pete, you're valued.
No, I don't seem to be valued.
You're the sauce-tasting element on this show.
The corporate front of cheap show now, apparently.
Well, I just...
Look, that's what it's a dynamic.
I undercut you on that.
You have to be there to tell me the sauce is good or not.
Usually not.
Right?
Come on.
It's a very brief sauce report.
I'm giving you 90 seconds to do a sauce report now.
Thank you.
You've just heard from the boss.
Now it's time for the sauce.
Yes, that's right.
It's the sauce report, everybody.
Back to basics.
Back to normal.
Back to a hot sauce.
And that's what the sauce is all about for me, Paul.
That's what got me into sauce in the first place.
Hot sauce.
Any views on hot sauce?
Just to add something there.
Yeah, when you put them in your mouth, they tend to be hot.
Hot.
I have your spoon for the tastings of the sauces.
Okay?
So I'm going to put this on this nice hygienic piece of paper here.
I'm balancing your spoon there.
Just for everyone else listening, I have now died inside.
The last ember of light has flickered away from the matchstick of my heart.
We're tasting some green hot sauce today, Paul.
Snuffed out.
Do-do-do-do-do-do.
I should do that.
Jamaica Valley is the brand, and it has a sort of mascot of a Jamaican lady in a chef's
suit, but she has the Jamaican flag, I believe.
I'm going to stick an apple up my arse.
Over the side.
You can see pictures of the sauces and other things in this show on our website.
And then I'm going to stick a fucking lemon up my arse.
You're going to stick a lemon up your arse.
Why?
Oh, I'm not listening.
I'm just talking.
I want you to support the source report.
Hashtag support the support.
Report support.
As you can see.
Report support.
Source support.
Support support.
Support.
How about that?
As you can see.
Yeah.
It's par for the course.
I'm going to stick a grape up my arse.
Paul is fucking denigrating the source.
Par for the course. He denigrates the source. All rightse Paul is fucking denigrating the sauce par for the course
he denigrates the sauce
alright
this episode is becoming
like a Dr Seuss book
this is Jamaican Valley
green
scotch bonnet peppers
where did you get it from
why do I care
what's going on
I got it from
a Caribbean shop
up in Wood Green
lovely
now I'm going to
give it a huff
yeah
ooh
that's really what i was hoping for
that from this it's a very grassy almost like a green pepper i mean it is green peppers but
almost like you know a green bell pepper that you'd have just in a salad green scotch bonnet
so scotch bonnet what kind of peppers that they're quite hot and they're the ones that look like
those scotch hats they're wrinkly do you mean scotch hats scotch bonnets like a beret like a
scotch bonnet.
Like an Hey You Jimmy hat.
What's a Hey You Jimmy hat?
You know, the Crankies wore them or whatever.
The Jimmy.
Oi, Jimmy.
No, he wore a schoolboy's cap.
Not him.
Doesn't matter.
Jimmy Cranky didn't wear a wee jocky Jimmy hat
or whatever it was called.
You said, a wee jock my lad.
He wore a schoolboy's hat.
Who was it?
Was that one Russ Abbott did?
Oh, yeah.
Let's use Russ Abbott as a great barometer of Scottish identity.
I'm saying he had a fucking Scotch bonnet on.
He had a beret, didn't he?
A kind of weird...
Do you want me to look up Scotch bonnet image?
No.
Scotch bonnet?
Yes.
Stop being such a dick and smell the sauce.
All right.
I'm going to smell the...
It's very green.
I want a report on the huff on this.
It's almost kind of like bright, translucent green almost.
Very.
It's got a kind of reanimator hue to it.
It certainly does.
I love a green hot sauce.
Oh, yeah.
It does have a kind of cross between like the herbiness of the grass, like you say.
Let me say one word.
And then a kind of HP sauce.
Yeah, grassy.
And that's what you want from a greener sauce.
Gracious.
So a red sauce, you're hoping that to have more of the sweeter, more tomatoey sort of umami end of things.
Do you know what I mean?
Whereas this has more grassy.
This might be quite hot.
All right.
Does it say how hot it is by any barometer?
There's no...
It's just sauce, mate.
There's a Scottish flag on the side.
You see that?
No, that's a Jamaican flag.
Oh.
But for my money,
I think Jamaican hot sauce is in my top three
sort of places to get hot sauce from in the world.
It's what got me into it in the first place.
Encona.
Here we go.
Here we go.
Pass me the spoon.
The spoon has been handed.
Let's have a taste of this sauce now, Paul.
Wonderful.
Here we go.
Spoon, hot sauce, scotch bonnet pepper, green.
Ooh!
Ooh!
Ooh!
Very vinegary.
Oh, and peppery, like black peppery.
You know what I mean?
Oh, extremely peppery and vinegary.
That would go nice with a sausage.
You always say that.
Like a pork sausage.
Oh, yeah, it would actually, yes.
I won't say that.
Well, I mean, what hot sauce wouldn't go nicely with a pork sausage?
Name one.
See, this is where you get in there, everyone.
See?
So it just fits, doesn't it?
It may be correct, but it's one of those things that just is correct
just because it always is correct.
Do you know what I mean?
It's a binary.
It's a fucking...
You know what I'm saying?
Just try harder.
A little harder.
Anyway, that's more than 90 seconds,
so congratulations.
Can I want a fucking...
A little breakdown
of what you thought
of that sauce.
Thoughts?
It was a hot sauce,
like the countless many
we've had on this show before,
except this one was
a little bit more vinegary and kind of watery in some respect.
It had chunks of pepper.
It didn't really have much flavour to it.
It had chunks of pepper in it.
Yeah, it had glibberly bits in it.
So you'd give it a low score then, would you, Paul?
At three out of five.
You didn't like it?
No, I liked it fine, but it wasn't exactly a standout.
Not a lot going on in terms of complexity, was it?
What would you have it with?
What sausage?
I would have that with, oh, God, yeah,
pork product.
Oh,
that would cut through.
Porky chops.
That'd be nice,
wouldn't it?
Some nice pork chops
and some hot sauce on the side.
Or you could have a vegan alternative.
I'm not,
you know,
like a nut cutlet
or whatever the fuckers eat.
Vegan.
I'm not anti-vegan.
We're in dry vaginary.
Hello.
What?
It's dry vaginary again,
isn't it?
What does that mean?
Vegan January or whatever they call it.
Veganuary.
Oh, so you thought if you were witty
and you could turn it into a vagina-based gag.
But you get dry January, don't you?
And you also get veganuary.
So I've put the two together, Paul.
That's all.
And I'm going to have a dry vaginary.
That's interesting because my penis,
every once a year, I have crustmus.
Oh, mate.
I just want to stop there.
That was good enough.
I think that's good enough
actually to stop there.
Do you have another segment
you want to talk about?
Sauce report over.
Yeah, that's it.
Well, yeah.
That's it.
We did the sauce, didn't we?
Yeah, we did.
I just thought you said
you had something else going on.
You said you had sauce
and something else.
No, I just had this sauce
on the shelf
and I wanted to check it out. I want to try those gummies. Oh, on. You said you had sauce and something else. No, I just had this sauce on the shelf and I wanted to check it out.
I want to try those gummies.
Oh, yes.
The hot gummies.
Here we go.
Did we talk about them last week briefly or did we just have a conversation about them last week?
No, these were sent in by a friend of the show, Mark Allen.
He does.
He has tried a bit of chili tasting.
He's done it sort of not competitively, but he's looked into the world of competitive chili tasting.
What are the parameters of that?
Is it just how much hot you can hold in your mouth?
Generally, you start with a basic.
You've got a lineup of contestants.
Right.
And then you start with a basic chili.
Right.
Everyone eats that.
No sauce, just the chili.
Yeah, usually the whole chili, just like a chili.
Yeah.
And that's usually it.
You just have to eat the whole thing.
One each round.
And then it's the next round.
Right. It'll be a slightly hotter one. Right. And someone might drop out there and go, no, I can't take it. Oh just have to eat the whole thing. One at each round. And then it's the next round. Right.
It'll be a slightly hotter one.
Right.
And someone might drop out there and go, no, I can't take it.
Oh, I can't do that.
So it's like knockout with increasing intensities.
Until there's one person standing.
Yeah.
Screaming, my throat, my precious throat.
And they must have sort of, you know, if there's a tie at the end.
Yeah.
You know, they must have wore a tie.
Both people can go all the way to the highest.
Maybe if there's a tie, one of them has to put a hot coal in their mouth.
Now these are gummies.
Now we've had some
gummies that have
chilli in on the show
before haven't we?
A few years ago
yeah but I remember
those quite enjoying them.
They're chilli minis
which were from Pakistan
and they were really nice.
Not too hot
but they were nice.
It can work as a combo
of course.
Well it's because
a lot of them forget
to put the flavour
in they just go
hot gummy.
But that was like
you could taste the fruit still.
Well I'd sort of
draw a line between
people who actually
want to make a nice taste in confection
and others who are just getting on the gimmick of making it hot.
Like those beans or whatever.
Punishment and toy foods, which chilli sometimes falls into.
This looks like it falls into that category of just being ridiculous.
This is Satan's Spawn.
Hot Heads, Satan's Spawn.
Angelic little gummy bears with a twisted dark side.
Which is...
They're chilly hot.
Habanero.
Okay.
Is the chilli in this.
Which has long since lost its luster in terms of the hottest boy on the block.
It's about as hot as a Scotch bonnet.
They're about the same level.
In my Scotchy bonnet.
I'm going to hand you one of these teddies.
They're red gummy teddies.
Oh, bigger gummy than I expected.
And softer.
One of those mini gummy bears.
Yeah, because those other ones we had were quite tough and kind of rubbery almost.
And they were nice because the texture suited it.
But this is more of a Haribo texture.
Mark did try these and apparently he says they're pretty intense.
So, you ready?
Intense?
They're pretty hot.
Really?
Yeah, apparently.
Oh, here we go then.
All right.
First bite.
Nice juice.
Orange flavour, isn't it?
Yeah.
No heat so far. I'm getting. Oh, hang on. There's All right. First bite, nice juice. Orange flavour, isn't it? Yeah. No heat so far.
I'm getting.
Oh, hang on.
There's quite a lot of heat in that.
Quite nice though.
Actually, really nice.
That was not that hot.
It's not burning at all, your mouth at all.
No, I mean, I'm getting the sparkle of it all in my mouth.
You know, the kind of hot spark of it all.
There's definitely heat there.
Yeah.
You're good with heat.
You do heat well, don't you?
Yeah, to some extent.
After a while,
when it loses all flavour to just eat,
then I lose interest,
if that makes sense.
When it gets too hot
and it starts hurting your mouth.
Yeah, and then I don't enjoy it.
They were okay.
I don't know if I'd go for another one.
I'd give those four out of five.
Really? You like that?
You couldn't pound the whole bag of them
in a night, but...
You could have a couple, couldn't you?
Yeah.
Get a bit of a chili hit.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's all right.
Yeah.
You got some water there.
Do you want to drink your water?
No, you drink your coffee instead.
Well, I enjoyed that, that candy.
Anything else?
Oh, we've got these Twix winter spice.
No, I'm drawing the line at Twix.
You probably won't taste it now anyway.
You drawing the line at Twix?
I'm drawing the line at Twix.
You drawing two lines?
Two lines, yeah.
Crustmas.
I'm giving two fingers to Twix.
I'm breaking the crustmas on your knobness.
I'm giving two fingers to the Twix.
And all the goo weeps out.
What?
Your crusty, thrushy helmet.
No, you just pick the crust off and then it all seeps out.
Then you can give it a dabbing.
That's one of the crust-mas traditions.
The little men come along and they break the crust on the crust-mas helmet.
What, on the little toffee hammer?
The treacle all runs down.
There's no treacle.
Into their little snow cones.
No, it's not like you crack it open.
They've got slushies and they put your knob bleed into their slushies like a dirty slushie.
So the crustmus elves come round with a toffeehammer, bash the top of my penis to release the crust.
You're getting it now.
And then the seepage is then harvested for some kind of...
A slushie, like a Mr. Slushie.
And then who buys that? The elves?
No, they keep it in between themselves.
They enjoy it themselves.
So they all just enjoy my sap?
Yeah, it's not a very popular festival.
No, it's not.
In fact, I won't be celebrating it next year
as a result of all this fucking horror.
You should know, it's your knob which forms the helmet.
The crusty helmet of knob-nob-mus.
Not knob-mus. It'sy helmet of knob-muss. Not knob-muss.
It's Merry Christmas
and Happy Knob Year.
Why are we even talking about this?
This is meant to be the new year's, man.
So, alright, there we go.
That's our first segment.
I'm going to expect better from you going forward.
What do you mean? More unusual
or cheaper or more things
that are on brand, not just here's some sauce, mate.
Can I have some on a spoon?
If it ain't broke, don't fix it, man.
What's the sauce report been about?
It's just been about sauce all the time.
It's just sauce, Paul.
You can lead a horse to water,
but you can't change its sauce.
You can lead a sauce to water.
Right, well,
while Eli has his emotional breakdown... Yeah, listen, I'm a loud one every other episode, aren't I?
What, a mental breakdown?
Uh-oh.
Yeah, you're crying.
All right, all right, I'm all right.
Yeah, are you though? Because I'm not really sure.
What are we doing on the show this week?
Today, this week, we are looking through more of your platters,
your charity shop finds.
And we haven't done a platter, a proper platter in a while.
A proper platter in a while?
We haven't done a proper platter in a while.
Oh, I know.
I haven't dropped a proper platter in a while.
Don't let it...
No, just please.
You need a hard reset.
Oh, don't let it splatter.
I've just dropped a proper platter.
Right, good.
Okay, well, that's what's happening next.
So join us for that segment then, Ben.
Okay.
Right, I'll do the intro for this bit then, shall I. Right, good. Okay, well, that's what's happening next. So join us for that segment then, Ben. Okay. Right, I'll do the intro
for this bit then, shall I?
No, wait.
I just want to give everyone
a little notice.
In the last segment,
Eli laughed so hard
he wet the couch he was on.
And so he's now had to put
a towel down.
You're such a dick.
All this name calling,
you're like a frat boy.
You're like,
Hey, Alpha!
Alpha Cheapus forever!
What are you sitting in front of? He's wet, alpha cheapers forever. What are you sitting
in front of?
He's wet himself
trying to shame me.
What are you sitting
in front of?
Trying to bladder shame me.
You're trying to
old man bladder
tain a lady for men
shame me.
Old man bladder.
Aren't you?
Aren't you?
Eli pissed himself.
Ah, that's good.
That's the tone you want
going forward, is it?
Eli pissed himself.
Actually,
that's what you
actually want, is it, Paul? That's what you, that's. Actually, that's what you actually want, is it, Paul?
That's what you want.
Can I answer, please?
He's going to keep on talking.
I can keep on talking.
No, I know.
I can keep on talking.
Do you want me to answer that?
Ask me the question straightly and directly and I will answer.
Are you pee-pee shaming my pee-pee hole and saying it?
Yes, I am.
I spilt some Perrier water.
That's what the middle class say when they piss themselves, isn't it? hole and saying it. Yes, I am. I spilt some Perrier water. If you must.
If everyone must.
That's what the middle class say when they piss themselves, isn't it?
Listen, Perrier ain't middle class no more, mate.
Isn't it?
No, no more.
I've got 60p.
For fuck's sake.
How's that?
Perrier is shit and all.
I don't agree with that.
Why?
Because the bubble's going too quickly.
Because it goes weak.
The bubble's going too quickly.
It goes flat too quickly.
Well, I happen to like the taste of it.
It tastes metallic-y afterwards as well.
Paul is on the Highland Spring.
Do you like that?
Okay, Jimmy Manu.
I got that especially for you.
Thank you.
Especially for me.
And you want people to think that I'm a grown man who wets himself whilst...
Ideally, yes.
Doing a podcast.
I mean...
That's what you want us to do.
That's what we want people to think.
I work with this guy.
He's a bit of...
He's, you know, funny guy and everything. But he pisses himself all the time. That's what you want people to think I work with this guy he's a bit of he's you know funny guy and everything
but he's all
he pisses himself all the time
that's what you want people to think
I mean ideally yes
that's what you want people to think of you
ideally yes
that would be nice
and he
I mean the thing
thing is
and then he
that Paul
he makes
he makes fun of
his co-host
who pisses himself all the time
well then don't pee yourself anymore
then it'll be fine
oh here we go
stop doing it
and it'll be fine
this is Eli fucks dogs all over again it's all you can fucking do well you stop doing that all the time. Well then don't pee yourself anymore then, it'll be fine. Oh, here we go. Stop doing it and it'll be fine.
This is Eli fucks dogs all over again.
It's all you can fucking do.
Well you stopped doing that
in the end, didn't you?
You stopped doing that
in the end, didn't you?
Eli's got a dirty bum.
Eli's got this.
You know what I mean?
Eli's pissed himself.
Eli's come up the wall
or whatever.
Shat the bed.
I have never shat the bed.
Can I do the intro
for this bit now, please?
Yes, please do
for the Silverman's platter
segment of the show i'm going to hand it over to little baby wet wipes to do this show here we go
hello everybody and i just wanted a phrase it's not because i think you know he's got it you know
there's overall incontinence or illness behind this i just wanted to be showing that you know he
gives up on holding and controlling his bladder in moments of
hysteria you are actually going full in on this you're going all in on this thing which made him
laugh so much pp came out his tip tip it did not it did i spilled perrier on the sofa yeah well
right i don't want to do the rest of the show now
yay hello everybody it's time for the section of the show
where we look at some musical numbers on vinyl.
It is Silverman's Platos.
And...
Are you going to do that?
The patron saint.
Yes.
This segment has a patron saint.
It does.
Clyde McFatter is the patron saint of Silverman's Platos.
And you know what, Paul?
Yes.
He usually says something here
because he likes to introduce it.
He does, yeah.
He's quite into that.
I've got this 80s sort of doctor's pager thing.
Yeah.
He's paged me.
Oh, what's he said?
Well, it just says, you know.
Can I read it out?
No, it doesn't say anything.
It just says,
you've been paged, certainly.
Yeah, but doesn't it leave a message?
Well, that's enough, isn't it?
He's got in contact with the show.
But what if he's left a message saying he wants to say something?
Oh, you don't call him.
He just pages you.
You don't follow him out.
No, when you page someone, there are two reasons.
One is you send them a message or you page them to say to call.
I've never seen a pager. I've never saw a pager in my life.
So therefore, what are you fucking doing?
I was going to give you just an example, a piece of technology.
I have no idea how it works.
Is there little messages on it, even early ones?
I thought it just beeped.
It just beeps, doesn't it?
It does two functions.
You could put a beep sound effect in and it would seem like I knew what I was talking about.
Well, no, I'm not going to do it now.
I'm a spy, aren't I?
There's Clyde McFatterpool.
Beep, beep.
There he is.
Beep, beep.
All those beeps, do you know what they mean?
It's asking you to call him.
All right.
Okay, I'll call him. Call him now. Beep, beep. It's ringing. Ring, beep. Oh, those beeps. Do you know what they mean? It's asking you to call him. All right. Okay, I'll call him.
Call him now.
Beep, beep.
It's ringing.
Ring, ring.
He's not answering.
Hello?
Hi, Clyde.
Hello?
It's Eli.
Can you do the intro for the show, please?
Oh, sorry.
I was just messing you to say I wasn't available to do it this week.
Well, you're here.
You're on the show now.
Anyway, got to go.
Bye.
You can't do it this week. Well, you're here on the show now. Anyway, got to go. Bye. You can't do it, Paul.
That broke him for some reason.
Now, Paul, what have we got on the show?
Well, what have you found for us?
What are we starting with?
We've got two records.
We're starting with Busby.
And I think we should start with Busby
because, you know,
following on from our apparently season of
Bernard Cribbins
remembrances.
Cribbins?
Where did you find that
by the way?
Of course,
was Dangerous Davis
in the film that we
covered on last week's
episode.
But he's so much more.
He's like the face
of Jack and Norrie.
You know,
he was in a few
carry-on films,
a bit of Doctor Who.
And he was behind,
you know,
what could arguably
be called the greatest
novelty record of all time,
Right Said Fred. Yes. Was it called Right record of all time, Right Said Fred.
Yes.
Was it called Right Said Fred?
Yeah, Right Said Fred.
It was the second song after Hole in the Ground.
Both songs feature a very similar theme of like workers on a construction site
or, you know.
But then the third that he made was Gossip Calypso.
And all three of those were produced by the Beatles producer.
George Martin.
Round 62, 61, 62. This is before the Beatles producer... George Martin. Round 62?
61, 62.
This is before the Beatles.
Well, that's what I was going to ask you,
because you said George Martin worked on kids' records.
He was the head of the children's record department in...
Was it Parlophone?
I couldn't... I don't know.
I don't know the story.
But, I mean, it's part of the reason why he's called the fifth Beatle or whatever,
because he added that whole sort of fantasy soundscape
that was texture to some of those later albums.
Okay.
Didn't he?
Do you see what I mean?
Like Yellow Submarine,
the whole soundscape of Yellow Submarine, that song.
Do you know what I mean?
All of that stuff.
Well, this is funny because...
Yeah, that's my favourite bit, all that stuff.
I love that.
I don't know.
Food, food. Come to dinner. Oh, he's wet the bed again.
He's wet the couch again.
I haven't.
Here's the other question, though.
Right, fine, you don't wet yourself.
But why can't you put lids on bottles?
That's what I don't understand.
I don't know, I like to get wet. I like to get splishy-splashy, man. Yeah, well, fair enough.ids on bottles? That's what I don't understand. I don't know.
I like to get wet.
I like to get splishy splashy, man.
Yeah, well, fair enough.
You know what I mean?
Get loose.
There's officially more water in and around you
than there is in you right now with that bottle.
It's all right.
I'm done.
I'm done.
Yeah, you're all empty now.
You can't just move the towel from behind you to there.
Oh, come on.
Don't stamp on it twice and think, yeah, that's a good job done. My sock is all soaked. Oh, come on. Don't stamp on it twice
and think, yeah,
that's a good job done.
My sock is all soaked.
Yeah, I know.
So, I haven't got shoes on.
What's interesting
about this track
is that we'll be going back
to the Ellis Marine
a little bit later.
The record that you've got today
is by Bernard Cribbins
and it's called what?
The A side.
This is a demo
on Pi Records
that I have.
Demo?
You can see by the big A
that means it's a demo record, which means
it wasn't released. Oh, right. I didn't
know that. Well, it may have been released, but this isn't the
release. This is the demo. This is the one that the radio stations
would have been sent, maybe? Yeah. I don't know
their demo. Yeah, so sales reps.
I think they get sent out to the
record shops, but anyone always with
the big A means it's a demo. Yeah.
But this is what i'm saying
it's like what's interesting about this is that the song is called what again sorry uh make someone
happy every day make someone happy every day and it's based on an advertisement that was initially
started by the post office in the 70s before it got changed to british telecom because i think
was it the post office used to run the phone line systems in the 70s version? So this must be the post
office version. Well, this is where I get a little
bit fuzzy on the details because
the post office used to own the phone
company as well. That's what I'm thinking. And then
80s came along. It must be because this is
essentially, it's a propaganda or an advert
encouraging people to use the phone.
Effectively, yeah. But I also
wonder if that's kind of
accidental, the message.
Because the adverts were Busby, which is a yellow cartoon bird of some kind.
He wasn't a telephone, Buzz Buzz.
No, but he was a bird.
He's a yellow bird.
Yeah.
He likes...
I don't remember that.
Oh, there he's on the phone now.
He's on the phone.
He's sitting on a wire, like a telephone wire could be.
And he's got a big red phone.
And he's on the phone. he's got a t-shirt
on. I quite like the artwork of
him. Well, we'll get into that in a second, but interestingly,
right, Busby was
on a bunch of adverts that was, as you say,
encouraging people to use the phone. No, just to call
people for the nice things. Remember the adverts where it was
like, the yellow pages, not just there for the nasty
things in life. Yes, but isn't that reminiscent
of that Noel Edmonds Hallmark
cash-in single that we covered on this segment before, Paul?
Do you remember?
Encouraging people to send a letter card, basically.
Yeah, by buying one from Hallmark or whatever the company was.
Whoever that special person is, do you remember?
He's like that, you know, just make their day.
I hope this record really brightens up their day.
And then on the other side, there was some terrible saccharine sort of thing.
No, that was the A side. The B side had like a song taken from the popular charts at the day. And then on the other side there was some terrible saccharine sort of thing. Love the one and the... No, that was the A side.
The B side had like a song
taken from the popular charts
at the time.
Yes.
To kind of say,
oh, is it?
Anyway, this is similar
in that it's basically
just saying it, you know...
Via song.
But the message of the advert...
It's playing on people's emotions
of wanting to be close to people
they're not around
and using that to sell the service.
It just seems weird
because like these days
it's weird to think of an advert encouraging you to use the service it just seems weird because like these days it's it's weird
to think of an advert encouraging you to use the phone system in this country make someone happy
so it's like you cheer someone up by calling the adverts and i'll put i'll put an example of one
in now the advert always like busby on the phone and he has a conversation with another cartoon
animal about something daft there's one about this well they haven't heard the song yet. No, we're going to put the advert in first to put context in.
So here's the advert.
Boomtown, scrapyard.
Hello, Hudson?
It's Busby.
Busby?
My old friend.
Hudson, you old dog, you.
What have you been up to?
Well, Busby, I've been meaning to come round and see you,
but I've been tied up lately.
Ah, you rascal.
Been chasing the milkman again?
Well, yeah.
And you know that cute little poodle up the road?
Yeah.
He keeps asking about you.
No.
And apparently the character
must have been a success
because then they rolled out
this kind of,
I don't even know
what you want to call it.
What would you,
why would they release it?
Do you reckon
it would have been a hit?
78 this is.
So maybe it was the telecom.
I think it was around then,
wasn't it?
Well, it says here
in the Wikipedia page,
it says,
Busby appeared in a number of TV adverts
with the catchphrase,
make someone happy with a phone call.
The voice in the adverts was by Bernard Cribbins,
and the character was created by Trick Film Studios in London.
There was loads of advertising campaigns,
toys, badges,
a comic strip in TV comic books, apparently,
and even a wristwatch,
a Busby wristwatch,
which I seem to remember as a
kid. I don't think I ever had one.
Nice item. But it was Busby purchased on
the second hand, and the watch had a blue strap,
it says here. But at some point,
yeah, the advert range was
launched in 76, so this Busby thing
was a 70s
creation, and it lasted until it became
British Telecom. Right, so this is still...
So when did that song come out? 78 so i'm good two years into the um into the process into the campaign yeah anyway
the song the height of the campaign maybe yeah so everyone would have been aware of it just another
little notice uh thing i noticed paul yeah there's not for sale there you see that's how you can tell
it's a demo as well you see up there it says I wonder if it was released in the charts. I don't know.
I'll have a look on Discogs.
Here's the clip of the song.
Make someone happy every day.
Busby featuring Bernard Cribbins.
Hello, Busby residents.
Busby speaking.
Make someone happy every day.
There's always something nice to say.
Friends to talk to, friends to hear.
Never ever shed a tear.
Make someone happy
every day.
Make someone happy
every day.
He's a fluffy little fella
on the telephone line.
When you see him
he makes you smile every time
He's a friend to
everyone
He's the one who makes it
fun
He's fuzz, he makes
someone happy
every day
There's always something nice to say Friends to talk to Friends to hear So there you go.
You've heard it.
What do you think of it?
Well, it's, you know, quite well produced.
It is.
And you know what it reminded me of?
And I think I said this to you when we were listening to it.
It has that Wombles, Mike Batt vibe to it.
Very much so.
And a sort of Beatles-esque sort of melody.
Poppy, upbeat, kind of cheery kids chorus.
But the Wombles is a lot better.
Well, I was going to say the Wombles must have been about the same time as this song.
Because in 78 he was doing the Wombles song, wasn't he?
Or he's the voice of the Wombles on the TV show.
Because Mike Batt sang the actual songs, right?
Yes. And he also wrote the Wombles. Wombling free. The Wombles of W TV show. Because Mike Batt sang the actual songs, right? Yes, and he also wrote the Wombling 3,
the Wombles of Wimbledon coming our way.
So there's an interesting kind of through line to all of this
where it's like Wombles and Mike Batt and this song.
Wombles were one of my first things, you know.
I wanted to go to Wimbledon to see if there were Wombles.
You wanted to get it on with a...
Captain Orinoco up the flu.
No, I was going to say Madame whatever it is,
Panache or whatever her name is.
What's her name?
Madame Trixie Bell.
I don't know.
I can't remember.
I thought they were a big thing.
It was a kid's thing, wasn't it?
Apparently Orinoco,
you remember very fondly.
That gave you the Orinoco flow,
didn't it?
This was written by
R. Morgan and C. Chapman.
Don't know.
Very little information online
about that song.
It doesn't tell you if it charted,
didn't tell you...
All I know is that it got released
on that label, Pi, in 1978.
It's a bit saccharine, isn't it?
It's one of those things where
it's not horribly offensive
and the verses are quite upbeat,
but the chorus kind of doesn't really work.
Doesn't really work.
And another thing I thought
while listening to it
is that Caribbean could actually put a tune out.
Oh, yeah, because even though those songs...
Because I thought, think of him as sort of...
Right Side Fred is a bit sort of spoken word, isn't it?
He sings it, but it's more sing-songy in a way
that doesn't really tax the vocal cords.
But he does a bit more gymnastics on this record,
and especially on the flip,
which is just a tune called Busby,
he says he does this bit where he goes sing like an opera singer
and he sort of does an impression of Carrera.
Like that.
So he's doing sort of more tricksy stuff like with his vocals.
It just feels like, who's the guy who did the,
my old man's a dustman, Lonnie Donegan.
The first kind of proper skiffle hit on the charts.
Right Said Fred's got a bit of that skiffle feel to it.
And the interesting thing about that is that
when the Beatles are coming through and all these new acts,
it was the first time you were hearing regional accents in songs.
Because most songs were affected with this RP or fake American twang.
And so people like Lonnie Donegan and then the success of that allowed them
to kind of go,
right,
Fred.
And actually have English accents.
You know,
estuary accents.
Regional accents.
Yeah.
And it allowed the songs to have more of an identity, I guess.
Yes.
So Cribbins didn't have to sing hard, he just had to...
I'm just saying, it's quite a proficient vocal performance from him.
And I didn't think of him as a singer, really.
No, even though he had three hits with George Martin, weirdly, in the early 60s.
Yeah.
And so Busby is a bit better, a bit sort of more swinging.
Well, the B-side, yes.
Shall we play a bit of the B-side now.
Play that now.
Play the B-side.
Hey, have you heard about what's going around?
They've spread the word about a certain bird about town.
Though he's no nightingale, he's right on the ball
Cause he's good news from beak to tail
I know somebody's with it all
Who goes around with a heck of a smile on his pecker?
Oh, Busby does
Who does that fancy tight flyin' without even tryin'? Oh, Busby does. Who does that fancy tight flying without even trying?
Oh, Busby does.
And now you should see him soaring, swooping,
zooming through the atmosphere.
Good old Busby, loop the looping.
Get that pigeon out of here.
Who always gets it all swinging
I prefer it.
Yes, so do I.
And often we complain that the B-side is just tossed off,
but you don't get the feeling there, do you?
It's better.
I actually think it's better.
And it feels like it's had just as much effort put in as well, funnily enough.
I wonder if this did...
Maybe this never chart...
Maybe it never was released properly.
Well, the thing is, the adverts were huge.
The character was obviously
in everyone's consciousness
because everyone wore the T-shirts
and Busby this and that.
And I vaguely remember Busby growing up
because in that period,
there were all characters like that.
There was bloody Tufty the squirrel
helped road safety
and all that kind of stuff.
And that was Cribbin as well.
Tufty the squirrel.
He did the voice for Tufty.
Oh shit, he did as well.
And in Hornsby train sets, he did the voice for that.
He's done a lot of voice work and a lot for...
I guess kids know him best.
I guess that's why we are fond of him.
Because he was a big part of our childhoods
and probably definitely our parents' childhoods even.
Because they were seeing him in the carry-on films in the 60s,
like Carry On Jack.
He worked for years and years, didn't he?
Oh, yeah, he's been bashing out at plays and films.
Let's just hope the curse doesn't...
Look, mate, he's in his 90s. It's just a roll of the dice? Oh yeah, he's been bashed out of plays and films. Let's just hope the curse doesn't... Look, mate,
he's in his 90s.
It's just a roll of the dice.
I know,
that's why I feel bad.
We're going to keep talking about him
week after week.
Some week he'll die.
It's not as if we fucking mentioned
Bob Saget last week though,
is it?
No.
You know what I mean?
Don't worry about it.
There is no curse.
Okay.
He's pulling his collar.
So,
I want to just go on a little tangent
again about this Busby song
because the animated bird
which was yellow
then became slightly more orange
in the later years
you can see it there
yeah
had a bunch of adverts
and they were animated
and what I found out
which was I thought really interesting
was the fact that the guy
who designed Busby
is actually an artist of note
and he worked on the Yellow Submarine movie.
And this is Trick.
Trick Films, is that right?
Let me just get that page back up again.
Bear with me a minute.
I believe you said it was Trick Films was his company.
Trick Films.
And a guy called Charlie Jenkins.
And Charlie Jenkins worked on the Yellow Submarine movie.
And one of his things that he was famous for,
but kind of he started pioneering,
was rotoscoping.
So all those scenes at the Penny Lane bit at the beginning. Yes, I was going to say, what he started pioneering is rotoscoping rotoscoping so all those scenes at the Penny Lane bit
at the beginning
is it Penny Lane
or Eleanor Rigby
is he
Eleanor Rigby
that's all rotoscoping
trippy rotoscoping bits
and the bit where
the Yellowstone Marine
travels through time
to get into the other space
that's all him
you know
and he had a big
he brought in as well
the art directors
and things like that
so between the three
or four of them
those people
he developed that technique
yeah
and then it was used
by Bakshi on his abortive,
some would say, Lord of the Rings attempt, wasn't it?
It's not new. Disney hit on that.
For instance, Snow White was effectively rotoscoped
because they would take a filmed motion of the woman playing Snow White
and then draw over that to get the fluid motion.
In fact, if you look at...
Draw onto the film cell itself.
Yeah, to get the motion.
So the woman didn't look like...
And that's what rotoscoping is, sort of.
It's a treatment done onto the actual film cells.
Is that right?
I'm not quite sure on the specifics of it.
Isn't it animating on top of...
Putting something on top of the actual film?
Yeah.
What was that...
Oh, bloody...
There was a Philip K. Dick adaptation.
That's what I was thinking of.
Through a scanner darkly.
Yeah.
I never saw that, but it looked great.
Yeah, I mean, I love the novel.
Yeah.
But it's incredibly dark.
One of Philip K. Dick's darkest novels.
Real head fuck, that book.
A really nasty, dark, paranoid, dark place.
Let's do a Philip K. Dick book about Busby and stuff.
You know, Busby, Tufty, all the icons of that era.
All in a sort of hell together.
The Green Cross Codeman, David Prowse, whatever his name is. He keeps coming up as well. I saw him in real life, you know. The Green Cross Code man. David Prowse or
whatever his name is.
He keeps coming up as
well.
I saw him in real life
you know.
The Green Cross Code
man or David Prowse.
David Prowse.
I guess they're the
same person.
He was in the guys.
He wasn't doing
Darth Vader.
No.
So wait.
He was as the Green
Cross Code man when
you saw him.
Yes I went to a cinema
and we watched one of
these terrible sort of
children's film fun
films.
Foundation ones.
But it was like a
Saturday film club thing. I vaguely remember my school had something like that as well. I mean my dad just took fun foundation ones but it was like a Saturday film club thing
I vaguely remember
my school had something
like that as well
I mean my dad just
took me to it
it was like
I want to get this
fucking kid out of my
sight for a few hours
no he came in with me
I don't know what it was
but I didn't go regularly
it was just once
he took me
every now and then
you'd go and it'd be
no only once
I can remember
that he took me
I guess that's why
it sticks in my mind
was it because
David Prowse was
going to be there
I think so
because he knew I liked Star Wars yeah but was he doing that before
or after star wars after he wasn't the green cross code man beforehand i don't i mean i don't know
still the green cross code man afterwards true that and so he just we saw this very boring film
one of those children's you know and then he was there and he and i wanted to ask him why do you
make the breathing noises so what He was there dressed as the
Green Cross Codeman. Yeah. Answering questions.
Look across the road kids. I was in Star Wars.
Now I'm fucking telling
kids I have to cross the road. I wasn't particularly
impressed but you know. No but did you know
he played Star Wars? Did he play Star Wars?
I mean Darth Vader. Of course.
Have you been listening to what I'm saying? Yeah but even
as a kid you knew that was the actor in the suit
even though the voice was not his.
Yes.
No, I just knew he was in the suit.
Weird.
I mean, I didn't know about the voice.
I just knew he was the guy who was in the suit.
I didn't worry about the voice.
I didn't think one thing or the other about the voice.
I didn't think, is his voice his voice,
or is it not his voice?
No, but the whole thing about him is that he's just tall.
Because it's not his voice,
and when they reveal him in Return of the Jedi,
it's not his face. Yeah. So I in Return of the Jedi it's not his face.
Yeah.
So I'd be fucking pissed off if I was David Prowse.
I bet Lucas was called out
and can't Prowse.
I ain't going to fucking
even put nothing in your view.
Yeah, David Prowse
sitting at home
and his phone rings.
Ring, ring, ring, ring.
Hello?
And it's Anthony Daniels
and he's like
ha, ha, ha, ha.
You're not in Star Wars.
I am.
You're not.
Hangs up.
Anthony Daniels
is a very nice man
he's apparently not though
is he
really
he's a knob
he's dead isn't he
no
C-3PO
he's still around
in fact I think he's got
more Star Wars credits
than any other person
ever associated with Star Wars
because every time
someone goes
do you want to voice C-3PO
in some bullshit video game
or advert
or whatever
he's made a whole career
of being that character.
Yeah, and being very protective over it.
Is he?
Yeah, apparently he's the right miserable cunt.
Oh.
I mean...
Well, the character...
This is all the people's opinions and stories.
Listen, if you look at the original trilogy,
the character's a bit of a twat, isn't he?
C-3PO.
Yeah.
No one likes C-3PO.
No, because he's a dick.
He wants to obey authority, doesn't he?
He just wants to...
He wants to... You know, he's a sniveling piece of shit, doesn't he? He just wants to... He wants to...
You know, he's a snivelling piece of shit, isn't he?
It's more like he's there to, like, flummox people.
He's there to show you that the stakes are too big.
You know what I mean?
He's there to go,
you'll never defeat the Empire, master.
But he's negging everyone out all the time.
That's why R2-D2 is always like,
fucking shut up, freaky-o.
Well, I agree with R2 on this.
Well, everyone sides with R2. I know, because he's a prick. Yeah. So that's why R2D2 is always like fucking shut up well I don't agree with R2 on this well everyone sides
with R2
I know because
he's a prick
yeah
so that's what I'm
saying if he's a
prick in real life
the character's a
prick fuck off
R2's like this
fucking cunt
follows me around
all fucking time
I want to be free
I want to hang out
with BB8 these days
he's a big cool
new buddy
are they buddies
have they had a
touching scene
a touching scene
where they rub
their balls up
R2D2 and BB8 big ball 8 rub this big ball on her Anthony Daniels. Are they buddies? Have they had a touching scene? A touching scene? Where they rub their balls up against each other.
What do you do to a BB-8?
Yeah.
Big ball eight.
Yeah.
Big ball on it.
That's what BB stands for.
Big ball.
Big ball eight.
Rod to dick to.
Rod to dick to.
I went to the river,
I throwed in a cod.
What river was it?
It was the river spot.
I'm swimming in my gravy tonight.
No, no, no.
Perhaps we can get the cod into the fizzy gravy.
Cod in the fizzy.
Cod in the fizzy gravy.
Cod in the fizzy gravy.
Fizzy gravy.
Whose gravy is it?
It's my own gravy.
I'm sitting in my gravy in a lukewarm bath.
My fizzy, fizzy gravy.
Bubbles of gravy popping all over my thighs.
I thought it was a fart, but it turned out being a shot.
I'm in my gravy.
Sitting in my own savoury gravy.
If anyone's listening who'd like to produce this as an official track,
I am very much open for it.
Let's do it for Christmas number one.
Yeah, Christmas number one.
We're going to raise money and we're going to call it...
Sitting in my gravy.
And then it brackets
my own fizzy gravy.
Yeah.
No, brackets.
Brackets the cod song.
Right.
Are we done with that?
Well, Busby, we've...
Have we done Busby?
We've done the connection
with the yellow submarine.
Yeah, we've done the yellow submarine.
We've done the guy
who did the rotoscoping.
We've no other songs related to Busby. the Yellow Submarine. Yeah, we've done the Yellow Submarine, we've done the guy who did the rotoscoping, we've,
no other songs
related to Busby.
It reminds me of
another song we covered,
the Postcode song as well,
Paul,
it's similar to that.
Yes.
Where they used to,
you used to have,
it's unthinkable now,
like so many genres
of novelty records,
and that Boston Gas thing
we did a few years ago.
It's pretty unthinkable now
to think of the Post Office
having a song out
do you know what i mean yeah but they had said why don't why don't modern companies do that why
don't like facebook release a song yeah think about it use facebook to wake up every day and
hate your life use facebook you'll want to end it all because of the timeline and everyone's more
successful than you though all the friends you grew up in your school. I don't think they do that in the song.
No?
No.
It'd be more ballady.
It's like, think of a world where you're still in touch.
You can speak to your mom, but not too much.
She's on the other side of the world.
You can speak with the lens and just remember that you've got some international friends.
Yeah, I like this.
But yes, it is the equivalent, isn't it?
And those type of songs don't exist.
The postcode song.
It's shitter, it's shitter, it's shitter every day.
The postcode literally was a song saying,
get ready for this change in the way we're administrating the mail.
Do you know what I mean?
And they thought the best way to do that would be via song.
But Britain is a country that can have novelty song successes,
so it's not too out of the thought of...
You know what?
You know what I mean?
Imagine there was a song, you know,
when they went from 01 to 0171?
Imagine when they changed that,
if there was a song out.
It'd be too confusing
because if you're doing a lyric
where you have to repeat information
and then tell them new information
and you've got,
it's not 01 anymore
or it's 0171 instead.
01, 01, 017, 01.
It's like, what is it?
01701 or 01, 01, 01?
Well, you'd have to remember it.
You'd have to write it better
than you've just attempted to,
wouldn't you?
Well, yeah.
I guess the latest one we had of that, actually,
was the Brexit clip.
Mike reads Brexit clips, though.
And also, wasn't there a song called Dog Police or something?
Dog police, nobody knows what you are.
Woof, woof.
That one.
No, Dog Police.
My arsehole.
Dog police your arsehole Dog Police, your arsehole
They do, because it's
It's insecure
Dog Police, music video, 1983
I've never heard of this
Does it go woof, woof?
I'll edit a proper version here
I love this was it a cartoon
it's men in dog masks
he's not a guy Was there a cartoon? It's men in dog masks.
He's not a guy in a dog mask, Paul.
He's freaking me out.
Was this like Sparks or something?
This is weird.
This is all like... Wink, wink, isn't it?
Dog police.
Who are they going to arrest?
Oh, there's a sleazy bar.
It is sparked.
There's a guy in a moustache there.
The dog police are going to come.
Is she a dog?
She's got something on her face.
Yeah!
Oh, it's like Jacob's Ladder or something.
Oh, it's weird.
She's got a funny dog. Oh, it's weird.
She's got a funny dog.
Okay, there's a little person serving her.
I think I've fallen asleep.
I'm not doing the podcast.
It's a nightmarish video, man.
When's he going to say dog police?
He's never going to say dog police.
There's no chorus. It just keeps going on and on.
Is he going to say dog police?
Okay, I'm frightened by this, Paul.
Paul?
There's the dog police as well.
Why?
Who's it by?
Dog police?
It's by dog police.
Are you joking?
Dog police is a short-lived 1980s new wave band from Memphis, Tennessee
that briefly gained notoriety because of their song dog police in 83 the video was featured at mtv's late night
show basement tapes and was on heavy rotation throughout 84 blah blah blah i've never heard
of that at all till this moment well i'm surprised that actually surprises me dog police i never i've
never seen that record i have no idea about that record the
band was inspired by new wave pioneers devo except you know devo you know will legit the credible
you know the incredible music it's always a bad idea if you want to be a successful group if you
your first song i reckon is actually the name of the band as well 80 you know what i mean it
doesn't not people i'm going to take you seriously then well the album was self-titled as well. 82. You know what I mean? Not people I'm going to take you seriously then. Well, the album was self-titled as well,
Dog Police.
Dog Police is Dog Police
on Dog Police Police.
Yeah.
It's like if I had a record
like, you know,
Chodney Sporoff
and my name,
and the name's Chodney.
There was 10 songs
on the album
called 1-800
Are You Middle Class Enough?
I'm Butch
and Positive Reinforcement.
It's all very sort of
arch, isn't it?
And sort of weird. The song tells very sort of arch, isn't it?
Weird.
The song tells the story of a young man who takes a woman out for a blind date.
He describes her as a chick from the canine scene who scratches a flea when she gets out of the car,
but he appears to be enamoured with her nonetheless.
They have a seat and order drinks at the Lone Star Bar.
I know, this is what I just watched.
But when the man comes back from the brief trip to the bathroom,
he finds that his date is being arrested by the dog police.
The second verse implies that the man went to have puppies with his date went on to have puppies yeah it says went on to have puppies yeah went on yeah that's what i got mate so is it a
platter or a splatter mr silverman a splatter it's a splatter for me as well like it sounds like a
bunch of cows being fucking toyed with by some kind of... Yeah? Midnight poo man. Yeah, the midnight poo man.
Children, you better go to bed,
otherwise the midnight poo man's going to get you.
He certainly will.
What noise does he make?
He goes...
Oh, the stables!
The stables!
Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
I'm the midnight poo man.
Calm down or you're going to have another Perrier incident.
There's no Perrier left. There's no Perrier left. I'm the Midnight Pooh Man Calm down or you're going to have another Perrier incident There's no Perrier left
There's no Perrier left
I'm the Midnight Pooh Man
and I do what I can
Shut up
I do all I can
because I'm
the Midnight Pooh Man
I do all I can
I am
the Midnight Pooh Man
and I do all I can
to put a poppy
on your head
I'm going to have a poppy on your head.
I'm going to have a bath in some gravy.
It's my own.
I'm doing a... Sitting in my gravy.
Brackets.
The Cod Song by Midnight Pooh Man.
Christmas 2022.
You heard it here first.
Oh, we've run out of time once again this week on cheap show but don't worry we're back next week
with more economy comedy fun and uh yes go to our website thecheapshow.co.uk we have a page for
every single episode so if you want to see pictures and or videos that accompany those episodes go to
cheapshow.co.uk and you can see the pictures there um also on our website it's a one-stop shop for
everything you need if you want to go to our merch page or tony's merch page or events cheap show magazine uh website
and order all the lovely stuff from there you can again go to cheap show.co.uk and also if you
want to be a patron that would be lovely go to patreon.com forward slash cheap show give what
you can but only if you can is that everything oh? All of the... Oh, no, P.O. Box.
I haven't pimped that in a while.
If you'd like to send us anything random
you find in the charity shop
for a future bin bag episode,
or if you have anything cool,
like a price of shite or a record or vinyl,
give it to us at Cheap Show,
P.O. Box 1309, Harrow, HA19QJ.
And also, every podcast app,
when you listen to our podcast through it,
we'll have all the metadata for this episode,
so you can go to those links directly
through this very episode you're listening to.
Paul, Paul, Paul,
you said there was something very special
arrived in the PO box.
Yeah, something really cool came the other day.
We're going to see it next week.
Next week.
I didn't want to cram it into this one
because I wanted to give it proper time.
Is it something you'd cram in?
Yeah, you could.
Really?
You could really jiggle in. You could
jiggle in? Yeah, you have to put a little bit of a
lube on it. And then you
fucking stick it in your arsehole. You could probably sit on it
and let it slowly sink.
I don't know why I say things like that.
I do. Attention seeking.
Well, you don't give me no attention
do you? So, what else?
We're on Facebook and Instagram. Look for Cheap Show or Cheap Show Pod. But ultimately we no attention, do you? So, what else? No, we're on Facebook
and Instagram.
Look for Cheap Show
or Cheap Show Pod.
But ultimately,
we're most active on Twitter.
So, at the Cheap Show Pod.
I'm active.
I'm at Paul Gannon Show
and Eli is...
I'm active on Twitter.
It just sounds like...
It sounds dirty, doesn't it?
No.
What is your YouTube?
No, what is your...
YouTube, Paul?
What is my YouTube?
Twitter.
You've got three seconds
or you don't get to say it at all.
Eli Snoyd.
And that is spelled E-L-I-S-N-O-I-D.
Thank you.
And Eli, I believe you have
an extracurricular activity
outside of this podcast
that you'd also like to promote.
I also have a music show
on Soho Radio
every two weeks
on a Sunday from two till four,
the House of Pickles Sound Show.
But if you miss it
or you're international,
I believe you can find it
on their website,
past shows.
You can,
and you can also go to
Blogspot,
House of Pickles
sound show.
What was that?
Codstop.
I didn't do this to you.
I didn't fucking interrupt you,
did I?
Codstop.
Blogspot or something.
Just do a Google search
for the House of Pickles
sound show
and you can find back
copies of it.
And, lots of things to look forward to.
We are hopefully planning two live shows.
Two live shows.
One's going to be a crossover and the other one will be for our 300th episode.
And that will probably happen around June, I think.
Oh, June now.
Because the plan is we'll record it around June,
but I'll edit it and it will go out in September
when episode 300 goes out
is that the little
intimate live show
we're talking about
no I might scrap
that all together
just for the sake
of my sanity
because we're all
going to be filming
Digitizer series 2
this year
so I'm trying to
figure out
how much time
I can give to things
because I don't have
time for my book
well that's only
going to be a week
isn't it
Digitizer
I don't know
because we've got
different plans
for this show
we're going to be
filming it throughout
the year
there'll be bits and pieces.
We're going to be out more outside stuff
and more strange features and things.
So it won't be just one heavy week again.
It will probably be spread out over a few months.
That's the plan anyway.
But as a result,
yeah, two live shows this year.
Stay tuned.
And people who follow us on Patreon,
by the way,
will get discounts to those live shows
and early access to tickets.
There'll be noodle content and sauce content, if I've got anything to say.
No, there couldn't be a live show without it, so I wouldn't deny you it for a live show.
Could I bring a wet noodle along?
If you want to bring a wet noodle or sauce.
Maybe I'll put some noodles in the flask and I could sort of drape them.
Maybe you could do some kind of George's Marvelous Medicine-y kind of thing and do a hodgepodge of all kind of splodge.
I don't make hodgepodges of splodge.
You should, though, for our live show.
Why?
Do the ultimate hot sauce noodle.
People would be disgusted.
I'll let you eat it off my caping bumhole.
I'll eat my splodge off your bumhole.
Yeah.
Could I dry it out like a cake of splodge?
No.
It's going to be matted.
Well, in that case, Matthew, I'm out.
Oh, sorry.
Well, see you next week on Dragon's Den.
Matthew? That's from. Oh, sorry. Well, see you next week on Dragon's Den. Matthew.
That's from fucking...
What?
You bet.
No, Matthew's from Stars in Their Eyes.
No, Matthew Corbett.
No, that's who you look like, Matthew Corbett.
I don't look like Matthew Corbett.
With the ginger beard.
That's it.
I should have brought that up.
You look like Corbett.
Where's Sooty?
All right.
No, actually...
Touch of frost.
That's fucking...
What?
That's too close to home.
What with Sally, you know?
We're not mentioning Sally.
Oh, what?
We're not mentioning what happened ever again.
I think we should because everyone heard it.
No.
And it was very rude, disrespectful to me is what people were saying.
No, it doesn't matter.
What happened with Sally?
It doesn't matter what happened.
I think you need to come clean because this is something that keeps...
You came clean into a puppet's mouth paul
sally was being operated by you she's not just a puppet she is and she's a marionette i don't
even want to know she's dirty she's not just physically covered in booking our show she's
not been booking our show she's a hand puppet and this keeps keeps bubbling up doesn't it keeps
coming back since the fucking 50th episode or whatever.
Was that 150?
I don't know.
It's 150.
I don't know.
It was 150, I think,
when I was outed.
As a puppet fucker.
Yeah.
And now it's happening again.
And now I've decided I'm going to own it.
I'm going to be proud of my puppet fucking...
I just don't want you to do it around me, okay?
Pretending there's a phone call
and then wanking yourself off, essentially,
in my corridor
as if you're being subversive and naughty
and having sex with someone
behind my back.
I mean, it's you wanking.
That's the reality.
That's the base reality of it, Paul.
I won't have you speak about Sally.
She's not a real person.
She's real to me.
She serves my needs.
I don't want to hear from her.
She's got a gentle touch.
Well, I don't want to hear from her
because I don't believe she exists, okay?
Well, it doesn't matter
what you believe, does it?
I won't be going over the schedule with her
as we planned next Tuesday.
I won't have that meeting.
I'm not having a Zoom meeting with you and Sally again, okay?
It's just her.
It's fucking disgusting.
You are there.
I'm not there.
It's Sally.
It's not, and it's disgusting.
I don't want to see spunk flying onto her fucking felt face.
Sally's a sock puppet, everybody.
She doesn't.
She just likes making bread.
Just turn the thing off.
Bye, everyone.
See you next week.